Immigrants in Western states most likely to benefit from Obama's executive order
At least four-in-ten unauthorized immigrants in eight states will be eligible to benefit from the executive order issued Thursday by President Obama, according to a new Pew Research Center analysis.
Idaho, where 44% of the state's unauthorized immigrant population is eligible for deportation relief, tops all other states on this measure. Other states with at least four-in-ten eligible immigrants include Arkansas, Colorado, Illinois, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico and Oregon.
More than 5 million unauthorized immigrants are eligible for deportation relief under Obama's executive action announced Thursday or the president's 2012 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, which grants relief to young adults who came to the U.S. as children. The new executive action also expands the DACA program.
When we expand our analysis to those eligible under both the new executive order and those already covered the president's DACA program, it's clear that many Western states, including those with the highest shares of unauthorized immigrants in their total population, are affected. With both programs combined, Idaho again tops the list, with six-in-ten (60%) unauthorized immigrants now eligible for relief, the highest share in the nation, according to the Pew Research analysis of 2012 data.
Though Idaho has the highest share of unauthorized immigrants affected by Obama's immigration policies, it has a relatively small population of unauthorized immigrants. Idaho's 50,000 unauthorized immigrant population is dwarfed by the 2.5 million in California and the 1.7 million in Texas. Both California (51%) and Texas (52%) are among the states where at least half of unauthorized immigrants are now eligible for relief. Nationwide, 47% of unauthorized immigrants are eligible for relief under new or existing programs.
The states that have high shares of unauthorized immigrants who are eligible for relief also have high shares of unauthorized immigrants from Mexico. Two-thirds of unauthorized Mexicans will be eligible for deportation relief under Obama's new executive action, according to a Pew Research analysis.
In Nevada, where President Obama traveled Friday to talk about his executive order, those newly eligible for relief make up 37% of the state's unauthorized immigrant population. The state's total of 210,000 is relatively small compared with other states. Nevada is also one of 14 states where the unauthorized immigrant population decreased from 2009 to 2012, a trend driven largely by a drop in the number of unauthorized immigrants from Mexico.
But Nevada stands out on several measures of unauthorized immigration. Nevada has the nation's highest share of unauthorized immigrants as a share of the state overall population (8%), the labor force (10%) and K-12 students with at least one unauthorized parent (18%).
Topics: Immigration, Immigration Trends, Unauthorized Immigration
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